Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 September 1941 — Page 6
~ posium on the ciety among insects, monkeys, primitive man and modern man, held at ~~ the University
bachelors to rewhen the .State
in monkey society, accord-
. ing to a paper presented by Dr.
Clarence Ray Sylvania State
* Dr. Carpenter
f Chicago as part
of the “Inventory of Learning” in
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honor of the University’s 50th anniversary. Dr. Carpenter revealed that among jungle monkeys there are confirmed bachelors who live alone and apparently like it. These are not old, weak males driven out of monkey society by younger competition. Often they are among the
most robust monkeys of the tribe. But they refuse to associate with social groups or to acquire permanent mates. These bachelor monkeys are permitted to go their own way when times are normal, Dr. Carpenter said. But when accident or old age removes a portion of the males from a social group, they are called upon to supply the male deficiency. All jungle apes and monkeys, except the gibbon, live in small organized groups containing more adult males than adult females, he continued. The extra males, the “bachelors” already referred to, are permitted to live as hermits or in small groups of males until deaths among the other males make them biologically necessary. The other males, in all cases except the gibbon, usually have harems of several females. Only the gibbon, the smallest of the so-called anthropoid or manlike apes, goes in for monogamy in the human fashion. Dr. Carpenter reported one family of orang-outans where husband and wife had apparently gone in for separate apartments. The family consisted of two adult females with young babies and one adult male who lived about one mile from the females. :
Winds Hold Up Rotarians’ Golf
BECAUSE OF THE inclement weather, the annual Rotary Club golf tournament was postponed today until tomorrow. Play will begin at 1 p. m, at the Highland Golf and Country Club and dinner will be served at 7:30 p. m,, Carleton Starkey, chairman of the golf committee, anhounced. “The Weather Bureau has promised us a fine day tomorrow,” Mr. Starkey said. ;
TROOPS 6 IF
AT SHREVEPORT
Reds Prepare Final Defense Of Maneuvers; Capture Vital Blue Plans.
By UNITED PRESS The main battle in the defense of Shreveport, final problem of the Army’s greatest peace-time maneuvers, is expected to develop soon, perhaps today. From both sides of the battle front, Leon Kay and Richard C. Hottelet, United Press war corre-
spondents now assigned to the op-,
posing American forces, reported nightlong blackout reconnaissance and skirmishes feeling out disposition of opposing units. Mr. Hottelet, with the small Red Second Army of Lieut. Gen. Ben Lear, assigned to defend Shreveport, reported, however, that the attacking Blue Army already had reached the Red’s “demolition belt” of land mines, destroyed bridges and road blocks in a general advance on the central front.
Reds Capture Plans
He said the Red forces had dropped back to prepared defense positions but there had been no major battle thus far in the war game's final phase, which began yesterday. The 107th Horse Mechanized Cavalry regiment from Cleveland, O., sent out ahead of the main Red forces on reconnaissance at zero hour turned in the best performance of the day. Within two hours it captured the officer in charge of operations of the 76th infantry Brigade of the 38th Division (Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia) with all his maps showing disposition of the Blue forces. Mr. Kay, with the Blue forces, reported that Red forces, using heavily armored units, were counter-attacking from Shreveport along the central front in an apparent attempt to reach the Calcasieu River. Alexandria, city of the southern front which was bitterly contested in the maneuvers first phase, was recaptured by the Blues after a series of rapid marches, apparently with little resistance.
The Adams brothers. Noel (left) and Edgar . . . one of the oldest
8 8 = »
Iii the Services—
One of Navy's
8 8 =»
Oldest Teams
Is at the Great Lakes Station
One of the Navy’s oldest brother teams was reunited recently when Noel L. Adams, of Indianapolis chief turret captain, was recalled to active duty and joined his brother, Edgar, of Terre Haute, chief gunner’s mate, at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. The brothers have a combined record of 62 years service with the U. S. Fleet. Noel is a turret instructor and Edgar is"an instructor in small arms.
Noel entered the service in 1908.|S
His younger brother began his service in 1912. Six years later they met, at Liverpool. Noel was a member of the crew of the Battleship South Carolina, while his brother was aboard the destroyer McDonough. They shipped out again on convoy duty and were seven years older when they staged their next reunion in Sydney, Australia. They hope to
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see more of each other now that they are landlocked for a while.
8 2 8 Sent to Air Corps
Three Indianapolis men who recently enlisted in the Regular Army for three years have been assigned to the Air Corps and will be stationed at Ellington Field, Tex. The enlistees are Robert E. Robertson, 843 Woodlawn Ave.; Max M. Baxter, 1546 Barth Ave. and Wile R. Coleman, 1742 S. Delaware
# ® ”
Draftees to Fly .
Five Indianapolis selectees are among 60 Hoosiers who are helping to man the Air Corps new light bombardment center, Will Rogers Field, at Oklahoma City.
They are Pvts. Early Miller, Edward G. Boggs, John E. Elliott, John E. Mills and Miles G. Burford. The recently dedicated field—named in honor of the famous cowboy-humor-ist—is preparing for important training maneuvers using its light and medium bombers.
” # 2
Dance for 150 Sailors
The First Aiders Club will sponsor a dance for 150 men from the U. S. Navy School at the Naval Armory Saturday afternoon at the Municipal Gardens. Arrangements are being made by Mrs, H. E. Lake, 811 Denny St., social chairman for the Club. Ivan Glidewell, director of first aid of the local American Red Cross chapter will act as master of ceremonies. Girls will be selected by the Club and will be approved by Mrs. Dorothy Buschmann, volunteer director of the Service Men’s Club which sponsored a similar dance on State House grounds two weeks
- ago.
The First Aiders Club is composed of a group who have completed the standard first aid course of the Red Cross.
Hayman Assigned
Lieut. Col. George R. Hayman, former instructor for the Indiana National Guard, has been appointed assistant chief of staff, G-2 (Intelligence) at the headquarters of the Fifth Corps Area, Ft. Hayes, O. Col. Hayman has been on duty et the Fifth Corps Area headquarters in the office of the assistant chief of staff, G-1, and as mobiliza~} tion officer since April 17. He went to Ft. Hayes from Indianapolis where for two years he was an instructor of the Indiana Guard.
” 8 a
Dr. Mosson Appointed
Dr. Lester H. Mosson, 1341 W. Michigan St., Indianapolis, has been appointed a lieutenant junior grade in the U. 8. N. Dental Corps, the Navy Department announced today.
RAP MNUTT RULE ON OLEOMARGARINE
Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 25. — Federal Security Administrator Paul V. McNutt’s ruling, which permits oleomargarine to look like butter in the eyes of dairy farmers, is the target of bills pending in the House and Senate today. Introduced at the request of the National Co-operative Milk Producers’ Federation, the measures would prohibit interstate shipment and advertising of oleomargarine containing milk products or having the appearance, taste or smell of butter. Such products offer unfair competition to the dairymen, backers of the bills. maintain. The House bill was presented by Rep. August H. Andresen (R. Minn.) and the Senate measure by Senator Guy M. Gillette (D. Ia). Enforcement of such a law would be taken out of the hands of Administrator McNutt, who now ad-| ministers such regulations under the food and drug law, and placed in charge of Secretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard.
i ————————————— ARMY HORSE, 36, RETIRED WATERVLIET, N. Y. (U. B)— The Watervliet Arsenal belives it has the oldest Army horse in the United States. Billy, who saw service in the World War, has been retired at the age of 36.
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16 CHESS TEAMS
|T0 OPEN SEASON
Play on Tuesday Night; Special Matches Are Scheduled.
The 1941-42 season of the Central Indiana Chess Association will be opened Tuesday night with 16 fiven teams meeting. 3 3 ch team plays one of the other teams on alternate Tuesdays. The team play continues until April when trophies are awarded
‘| to the team with the best record
and to the members of that team. At present the tropey is held by the Bishops’ team, headed by Clark B. Hicks. An exhibition of blindfold and
‘simultaneous chess will be given by
George Koltanowski at 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12. The Association will send a 10man team to Dayton, O., Oct. 5 to play 20 games with a similar team. The last contest at Dayton was won
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: e Association is plane A team of 10 from Milwaukee ning matches with Purdue Univere at 2 pm. Oct. 26|sity at Lafayette and with Indiana
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